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Quality health plans & benefits Healthier living Financial well-being Intelligent solutions Tobacco Cessation Resource Guide Aetna Resources For Living SM 44.05.901.1-ARFL (2/13)

Tobacco Cessation Resource Guide - University Hospital · These quitlines help you to gain access to information and resources to quit using tobacco products. Go to the website to

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Page 1: Tobacco Cessation Resource Guide - University Hospital · These quitlines help you to gain access to information and resources to quit using tobacco products. Go to the website to

Quality health plans & benefitsHealthier livingFinancial well-beingIntelligent solutions

Tobacco Cessation Resource GuideAetna Resources For LivingSM

44.05.901.1-ARFL (2/13)

Page 2: Tobacco Cessation Resource Guide - University Hospital · These quitlines help you to gain access to information and resources to quit using tobacco products. Go to the website to

Tobacco Cessation Resource Guide

Table of Contents

You’ve decided to quit nicotine! ............................................................................................. 2

Tips to help you quit ............................................................................................................... 3

Quit smoking aids ................................................................................................................... 4

National resources................................................................................................................. 5

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Page 3: Tobacco Cessation Resource Guide - University Hospital · These quitlines help you to gain access to information and resources to quit using tobacco products. Go to the website to

Tobacco Cessation Resource Guide

You’ve decided to quit nicotine! Terrific! Now, you’ll be able to breathe easier, smell better, enjoy food more and live a healthier life. Over time, you’ll notice even more benefits to living a smoke-free life

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Page 4: Tobacco Cessation Resource Guide - University Hospital · These quitlines help you to gain access to information and resources to quit using tobacco products. Go to the website to

Tobacco Cessation Resource Guide

Tips to help you quit

• Talk to your doctor. Nicotine – and withdrawal from it – may affect certain health conditions and interact with some medications. Let your doctor know when you plan to stop smoking, dipping or chewing tobacco. Your doctor may have thought or ideas to help.

• Get support. Let friend and family know that you

are trying to quit. Ask for their support. If anyone smokes or chews, ask them to not offer you tobacco or use it around you.

• Join a support group. Or find someone else who is quitting. The two of you can support one another through

cravings. This helps to make quitting easier for both of you. • Figure out your “triggers.” When do you most want to smoke or chew? When you’re stressed? After a meal?

When you first wake up or at the end of the day? Knowing when you are most likely to smoke, dip or chew will help you to avoid and manage better. You can choose instead to take an after dinner walk or have a piece of gum. Use an index card to write a list of ways to deal with urges that arise. Try doing something from the card whenever you think you might slip.

• Think “five minutes at a time.” When you “need” a cigarette, dip or chew, wait five minutes. Many people who

do this find that by the time the five minutes have passed, the urge is gone. • Write down all the reasons why you want to quit. Keep copies of this list in the places where you usually

keep your tobacco. Review this list whenever the urge to smoke or chew strikes. You might even want to say your reasons aloud a few times.

• Stay busy. Become more active. Bike, walk, work out, go to a movie - these are all examples of ways to keep

yourself busy and distracted. Remember it’s good to hang out with others who are also trying to quit. It’s also helpful to do things where smoking isn’t allowed.

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Page 5: Tobacco Cessation Resource Guide - University Hospital · These quitlines help you to gain access to information and resources to quit using tobacco products. Go to the website to

Tobacco Cessation Resource Guide

Quit smoking aids There are many programs and products designed to help people quit, including:

• Nicotine patch. The patch provides small amounts of nicotine throughthe day. This breaks you of the smoking habit and cuts the amount ofnicotine you get over time. You start with a higher dosed patch thendecrease over the course of several weeks. This cuts down on cravings.The patch is offered "over the counter" at drugstores and major retailstores.

• Nicotine gum. Like the patch, nicotine gum lessens your cravings whileyou withdraw from smoking. You can purchase it over the counter.

• Biofeedback. Professionals who use biofeedback machines offer thistreatment. The machine measures your body’s response to stress. Youthen learn ways to relax. This can help you curb urges by teaching youto relax when you feel the need to smoke or chew.

• Hypnotherapy. Some clinicians use hypnosis as a form of treatment. The patient enters a state of deeprelaxation where he or she becomes more open to suggestion. The hypnotist may suggest that the urge tosmoke or chew is no longer present; or suggest that every time the person has the urge to smoke or chew, he orshe will reach for a piece of gum instead.

• In-patient program. There are some residential, in-patient treatment centers where support, medications, andbehavioral therapy are all part of the treatment to help people stop smoking.

• Support groups. These groups offer people trying to quit a chance to receive and give support to others whoare also trying to quit. You may also receive helpful materials on quitting.

• Cognitive behavior therapy. Cognitive behavior therapy is a short-term therapy designed to help you considerhow your thoughts lead to undesired behaviors like smoking. It is action-oriented and helps the client learn theskills needed to be free of nicotine.

• Acupuncture. This works by stopping messages sent from the brain to the body that nicotine’s needed. It is saidto reduce nicotine cravings, calm the nervous system and strengthen willpower.

• Quit-smoking medications. Check with your physician about FDA-approved drugs that have proven to aid instopping smoking. Some of these drugs reduce the desire to smoke over time or block the effect of nicotine.

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Page 6: Tobacco Cessation Resource Guide - University Hospital · These quitlines help you to gain access to information and resources to quit using tobacco products. Go to the website to

Tobacco Cessation Resource Guide

National resources American Lung Association 1-800-548-8252;Website: www.lungusa.org.The American Lung Association offers a variety of smoking control and prevention programs. They have agerelated groups such as:

• Teens Against Tobacco Use (TATU). This is a peer-teaching tobacco control program aimed at discouragingteens from taking up smoking.

• Not On Tobacco (N-O-T). A program to help teens quit smoking.• Freedom From Smoking. Considered the "gold standard" of group, peer-support to smoke smoking. Contact

your local American Lung Information for help in your area.

North American Quitline Consortium 1-800-398-5489;Website: www.naquitline.orgThe North American Quitline Consortium is made up of quitlines around the world. These quitlines help you to gainaccess to information and resources to quit using tobacco products. Go to the website to find an interactive map thatwill provide Quitline information in your area.

Smokefree.gov 1-800-QUIT NOW (1-800-784-8669);Website: www.smokefree.govSmokefree.gov provides information and resources to help peoplequit smoking. Go to the website for information on:

• An online, step-by-step quitting guide.• Local and state telephone quit-lines.• The National Cancer Institute’s instant messaging service.• Publications which you can download, print or order.

The Foundation For A Smokefree America Website: www.tobaccofree.org The mission of the Foundation For A Smokefree America is to motivate youth to stay smokefree and empower smokers to quit. The foundation uses web resources, education-based programs, peer teaching programs, and proactive physician programs to fulfill that mission.

Smoking Cessation Website: www.smoking-cessation.org Information on the latest methods for quitting smoking. There is also a savings calculator so you can learn how much you will save in a week, month or year from quitting today!

Nicotine Anonymous 1-877-TRY-NICCA (1-877-879-6422);website: www.nicotine-anonymous.orgNicotine Anonymous is a 12-step program to help participants quit using tobacco. Information about meetings isavailable by phone or on the internet

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